@hamblingreen Depends which service. A social network? No doubt, you're making it more valuable.
An operating system? A little - you're shifting the balance of power by not making the competitor seem relevant ("Nobody is using Linux anyway").
By using a system, you're supporting its importance. Social effects.
@hamblingreen @dcz I say "if you want to reach me, don't use facebook." There are (supposedly) a half-dozen messages I've missed over the last few months since logging in.
But it's nice to give people multiple alternatives: my family used email before escorting themselves into a walled garden, but sms is still pretty accessible.
@hamblingreen I also hate that, because it means placing your trust in another fallible company. Using a decentralized network avoids this problem. XMPP, 'the standard protocol', is quite decentralized and easy to self-host. On the other hand MMS is also decentralized and people use it extensively. Personally navigating this myself. Knowing people have had success migrating smaller networks gives hope.
@zachdecook then come along sms-like services that are better in many ways like matrix's e2ee messaging. do you think it's worth it to try and get them to switch to things like that? why or why not? i think that it's easier work with what they already use (like email or sms), i hate it when people tell me i need to sign up for this or that.